Paul Sinton-Hewitt


Peter Paul Sinton-Hewitt CBE FRSA is the founder of Parkrun. He was appointed a CBE "for services to Grassroots Sport Participation" in 2014, and was selected as an Ashoka Fellow in 2016. In December 2019, he was awarded the Albert Medal for building a global participation movement and made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.

Early life

Born in Zimbabwe, Sinton-Hewitt grew up in South Africa. At age five he was made a ward of the state and then lived at boarding schools. He was educated at Potchefstroom High School and was a crew member supporting Bruce Fordyce in the Comrades Marathon.
He moved to the United Kingdom where he was living when he had a breakdown in 1995. He has said that the personal challenges he has experienced, including bullying during childhood, and the way exercise and activity have helped him deal with them, were influential in motivating him in creating parkrun and its inclusive approach to sport.

Parkrun

Sinton-Hewitt started the Bushy Park Time Trial in 2004 whilst unemployed and unable to run due to an injured leg. It evolved into Parkrun - a free 5 kilometre timed running event that takes place every Saturday morning. Sinton-Hewitt first began Parkrun in Bushy Park in London. Originally called Bushy Park Time Trial, the first event took place on 2 October 2004, with 13 entrants. In April 2010 a two-kilometre "Junior Parkrun" format was added at Bushy Park for children aged 4 to 14. As of summer 2018 each weekend roughly 220,000 to 280,000 people participate in about 1,500 Parkruns globally.

Other pursuits

In 2018, Sinton-Hewitt completed the Vitruvian Triathlon.